Cuba - “Mafia driver turned music aficionado dies in Cuba, gambling days long forgotten”

from http://www.chroniclejournal.com/CP_stories.php?id=46070
By ANITA SNOW
Monday, May 28, 2007

HAVANA (AP) - The man who was Meyer Lansky’s driver and bodyguard during the Mafia’s heyday in pre-revolutionary Cuba died earlier this year, a curious footnote in a communist-run country whose past as a gambling mecca for vacationing Americans is all but forgotten.

There was no story in the Communist party daily Granma about the Feb. 12 death of Armando Jaime Casielles, at age 75, from lung cancer. No mention on Cuban state television either, despite the decades he spent promoting Afro-Cuban dance and music in his post-Mafia years.

Casielles’ close friend, Enrique Cirules, got the news through word of mouth.

“He liked his cigars, he liked his whiskey, never stopped working,” Cirules told The Associated Press. “He was a very respected man.”

A stout, reserved man who sported eyeglasses, a goatee and a pinky ring, Casielles was among the last people alive with firsthand knowledge of Mafia operations in the colourful, decadent Havana that thrived before a young rebel named Fidel Castro seized power.

Stoic and discreet, Casielles was there with Lansky during numerous meetings with Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista, who protected gambling businesses on the island, and accompanied him when the mobster travelled around the Caribbean to talk with underworld figures such as Santos Trafficante Sr.

Casielles helped Lansky hide in the Cuban capital in late 1957 after the Sicilian Mafia families of New York tried to grab control of the mobster’s Havana operation, and violence erupted in Manhattan.

And he was behind the wheel of Lansky’s silver-grey 1957 Chevrolet Impala convertible on New Year’s Eve 1958. As word spread that Batista had fled the island and Castro’s bearded rebels were close to victory, he helped the gangster scoop up millions of dollars in profits from his Havana casinos.

The next day, Cuban mobs euphoric over the revolutionary triumph ransacked the gambling dens, exposing their deep resentment of Mafia control of the island. Bonfires of smashed slot machines and roulette tables raged in Havana’s streets.

Soon thereafter, the revolutionary government outlawed gambling, prostitution and nonprescription drugs, and the mobsters gave up without a fight.

“The gigantic projects of gaming, drugs and sex; channels of heroin to the United States, and cocaine powder for the consumption of thousands of American tourists who visited the wildest spots in Havana … were condemned to disappear as soon as Batista’s tyranny fell apart,” Cirules wrote in “The Secret Life of Meyer Lansky in Havana.”

Available only in Cuba in Spanish, it sold out when it was published in 2004 and is now in its second edition.

The book also revealed the secret life Casielles led before undergoing what he described as a moral conversion, rejecting his Mafia past and becoming the public relations director of the Conjunto Folklorico Nacional dance troupe for more than three decades.

Born in Havana in 1931, Casielles left the island in 1948 to study public relations at Northwestern University, perfecting his English. He was a card dealer in a Las Vegas casino when Lansky persuaded him to be his assistant in Cuba.

As Cirules researched his book, the two men spent countless afternoons visiting Lansky’s haunts: the former military base where Lansky and Batista met, the Marina Hemingway where Lansky took his mistress Carmen; the hotels where raucous Americans arriving on 80 daily flights from the United States once crowded around roulette wheels and blackjack tables.

The Capri, the Rivera, the Deauville, and the Nacional hotels still stand today, destinations for beach-seeking Europeans on travel packages and the rare American congressmen on trade and fact-finding missions.

“I began to discover a Havana that I never knew existed,” said the 68-year-old Cirules, who grew up in eastern Camaguey and didn’t arrive in Havana until long after the revolution.

Casielles described how Lansky left Cuba for good with a fake passport in April 1959. Carmen accompanied him to the United States, where he died in 1983, 12 years after he was indicted for allegedly skimming millions of dollars from the Flamingo hotel-casino in Las Vegas. The charges were dismissed because of his poor health.

The millions of dollars they collected that New Year’s Eve had already been spirited out.

“You’re coming with me,” Casielles recalled Lansky telling him.

“I told him no.”

“Well,” replied Lansky, “you know what you’re doing.”

Casielles underwent a “spiritual, ethical and moral crisis” about the harm organized crime had caused Cuba, Cirules said.

“This was the reality of many Cubans at that time,” agreed longtime friend Gregorio Hernandez, a musician and dancer. “Jaime became a super revolutionary, an admirer of Fidel Castro and his work.”

Casielles later became interested in Cuba’s African-influenced music, helping the dance troupe launch projects such as Havana’s popular Sabados de la Rumba, which brings families together to enjoy traditional music each weekend. He also married twice, and had three children: a son and daughter now in Venezuela, and a daughter in Havana.

Casielles didn’t hide his years with Lansky from others in Castro’s Cuba, but “his life after that was so different,” said Hernandez. “He left behind a life of wealth and shared all these difficult years with us.”

It was not the former Mafia driver Cubans mourned when Casilles died, but a revolutionary who delighted in promoting his country’s traditional culture. That’s the man Hernandez sang his farewell rumba to at the memorial service, fulfilling a last promise to a good friend: “When one loses a brother, what sadness! What pain is left in the soul!”

Posted: May 31, 2007 Comments (0)

MEXICO - Televisa plans gaming expansion

Miama Herald

Mexico City-based broadcaster Televisa said it will invest $60 million this year into its gaming business, mostly into electronic lottery machines.
BY IOAN GRILLO
Associated Press

MEXICO CITY

“Mexican media conglomerate Televisa, better known for its Spanish-language soap operas and its stable of pop stars, said Thursday it plans a big expansion in a new, potentially lucrative business: gaming.

Executive Vice President Alfonso de Angoitia said in a conference call that the Mexico City-based company will invest $60 million this year into its gaming business, mostly into new electronic lottery machines.

Launched earlier this month, Grupo Televisa’s gaming business now has 3,500 machines in pharmacies and convenience stores across Mexico and plans to have 10,000 by the end of the year, De Angoitia said.”

article continued ….

Posted: February 25, 2007 Comments (0)

Guyana government tables casino gambling legislation

Monday, January 15, 2007, by Gordon French, Caribbean Net News Guyana Correspondent

GEORGETOWN, Guyana:
“Home Affairs Minister Clement Rohee last week tabled the controversial Gambling Prevention
(Amendment) Bill in Guyana’s National Assembly, despite a petition from the Christian community for the Bill to be withdrawn.

Prime Minister Samuel Hinds, government’s point man to hold consultations on the proposed Bill maintained that Guyana
was a secular state and the move to introduce casino gambling was to boost the country’s tourism product.

Church leaders picket Parliament

Security around Parliament buildings was evidently beefed up in an apparent effort to keep protestors at bay. However,
religious activists holding placards gathered outside Parliament shouting slogans and singing religious hymns as parliamentarians
made their way into the proceedings.”

continued at 2003-2007 Caribbean Net News

Posted: January 17, 2007 Comments (0)

Guyana - International Casino gambling legislation for Parliament on January 11

By Miranda La Rose, Sunday, December 31st 2006

The government will lay the casino gambling legislation in Parliament on January 11 with the expectation that the debate on and passage of the bill would be completed at the earliest time thereafter.

Contacted for an update on the consultations and the status of the casino gambling legislation, Prime Minister Sam Hinds told the Stabroek News that the government submitted to Parliament on Thursday three signed copies for publication and distribution to the members of Parliament.

Apart from the fact that casino licences would not be granted to any hotel with fewer than 250 rooms or below four-star standard and that the casinos would not be open to Guyanese, the provisions of the bills are not been widely known.

Government is hoping to push the bill through Parliament in time for Cricket World Cup and to accommodate Buddy’s International Hotel and Resorts, which would apparently be the only hotel eligible to receive the licence in the first instance.

On Thursday, President Bharrat Jagdeo had indicated that the government was in discussion with a number of groups for the construction of other hotels in the country, which it is expected would also be granted casino licences based on certain criteria.

Hinds said he had held consultations with some sections of the religious community because the government recognised that the religious groups were particularly concerned about casino gambling.

On religious grounds, he said, they were all against gambling of any sort including sweepstakes, lotteries and horseracing and they could not approve of casino gambling.

He said the government understood and appreciated the position of the religious leaders and “would certainly guard against the potentials evils that they pointed to.” These include the dangers of addiction to gambling. “We are certainly aware of those dangers. We will keep an eye on them and try to guard against them,” he said adding that people in general, however, could form addictions to many things including food and even exercise.

Though he did not provide a name, Hinds said there was one member of the religious community who said he had seen casino gambling in Atlantic City and while he maintained his theological position against gambling and would not take part in it, he understood that casino gambling was a fairly common form of entertainment for modern society.

Hinds met the groups on December 8 at his Kingston office but said he did not get the kind of attendance he had expected. He said there were representatives of temples from the Hindu community, three churches from the Christian community and four mosques from the Muslim community.

Though a number of umbrella organisations were invited, Hinds said that some representatives contacted him after the meeting stating that the invitation to the consultation was given at short notice or they were not available to attend at the requested time.

Asked about representations from other stakeholders such as tour operators and the private sector, Hinds said he met the religious community during a period when the President was out of the country and he was deputising on his behalf. He said Jagdeo would have met with other stakeholders to solicit their views and their recommendations would have been considered as well.

These include the view that it would be hypocritical of the government to allow foreigners but not Guyanese who travel outside the country and take part in casino gambling activities, access to local casinos .

Hinds said that these stakeholders, however, understand that casino gambling was “an important component in our total tourism product particularly to provide entertainment in the evening.”

When contacted representatives of the Tourism and Hospitality Association of Guyana (THAG), the Private Sector Commission (PSC) and the Guyana Tourism Authority (GTA) told the Stabroek News that while they were aware of the discussions and debate and might have taken part they were not consulted by the government nor had they seen a copy of the draft bill.

© Stabroek News

Posted: January 3, 2007 Comments (0)